October 2011 Governance and Militancy in Pakistan’s Swat Valley1 Justine Fleischner Introduction and Background In 2009, the Swat Valley became a focal point of Pakistan’s war against militancy and terrorism. The government signed a peace agreement effectively ceding control of the district to the local Taliban faction, allowing it to enforce its interpretation of Islamic law. Soon, a video of a teenage girl being flogged by a Taliban commander emerged and sparked outrage within Pakistan and around the world as a symbol of a situation that had gone out of control. By April 2009, Taliban fighters had swept into neighboring Buner district and were portrayed by the international media, with some exaggeration, as being on the verge of a siege of Islamabad. The following month, Pakistan’s military forces launched a campaign to regain control of Swat. The campaign succeeded, but the fighting displaced hundreds of thousands of people from Swat into nearby areas, creating a serious humanitarian crisis in the country’s northwestern region. A little more than a year later, as many of those internally displaced persons were returning to a newly stabilized Swat, the worst flooding in Pakistan’s history created a new crisis that threatened to undo what little progress on reconstruction the military or civilian governments had achieved.2 In early 2011, two years into the longest sustained military operation in Pakistan’s history, the army began a phased withdrawal from the surrounding districts of Shangla and Buner.3 While welcomed news, the details of the plan have not been made public, and the ability of local security forces to maintain order is untested. More importantly, the capacity of local governance officials to lead reconstruction efforts and improve service delivery in justice, education, and health may be constrained by the absence of a cohesive local governance framework. While there have been some significant changes to the laws and institutions that provide justice in Swat, namely the implementation of the Nizam-e-Adl Regulation, the formal judicial system has escaped much needed reform, and there are currently 2,500 alleged terrorist suspects being illegally detained by the military. There has been no talk of community reconciliation and very little in terms of oversight reform. Pakistan’s Swat Valley was once a popular vacation destination known for its great natural beauty, pristine rivers, and the Malam Jabba ski resort. It is in no way a remote part of the tribal hinterland, sitting about 150 miles from Islamabad and about 100 miles from Peshawar, the provincial capital. Set at the base of the Hindu Kush, Swat district rests under the provincial control of Khyber Paktunkhwa (KPK) in the frontier region of northwest Pakistan. The entire population of the district is estimated to be around 1.7 million, although reliable census data is unavailable. A significant number of ethnic minorities reside in Swat, including Kohistanis, Gujars, Hindu, and Sikh minorities, but the dominant ethnic group is Pashtun (mainly of the Yusufzai tribe) and the dominant language is Pashto. The people of Swat share a common identity and history, regardless of their ethnicity or tribal background. 1 This paper was prepared as part of a forthcoming report on governance and militancy in Pakistan. This research would not have been possible without the generous support of the Ploughshares Fund, the Henry Luce Foundation, and the Carnegie Corporation of New York. 2 Salman Masood, “Video of Taliban Flogging Rattles Pakistan,” New York Times, April 3, 2009; Carlotta Gall, “Pakistani Army Poised for New Push into Swat,” New York Times, May 5, 2009; “Humanitarian crisis ‘worsens’ in Pakistan’s Swat Valley,” The Telegraph, May 7, 2009, http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/pakistan/5290045/Humanitarian-crisis-worsens-in-Pakistans-Swat- Valley.html. 3 Ismail Khan, “Army starts relocating from Swat,” Dawn, February 1, 2011, http://www.dawn.com/2011/02/01/army-starts-relocating- from-swat.html. 2 fleischner | the swat valley The area has a rich history that has been examined in great depth by anthropologists and local scholars.4 Swat was once the life-center of Vajrayana Buddhism in the region. After a period of influence by the Hindu Shahi kingdom, the Muslim forces of Mahmud of Ghazna invaded Swat at the height of the Golden Age of Islam. In the sixteenth century, the Yusufzai tribesman of Southern Afghanistan migrated into the region and settled there. The Yusufzai largely resisted any efforts to establish a formal state system up until 1915, when conflicts among the local tribesman threatened the internal stability of the area and complicated their efforts to repel incursions by the leader, or Nawab, of neighboring Dir state. Judging that the defense and autonomy of Swat could be best maintained under autocratic rule, the Yusufzai invited Abdul Jabbar Shah to establish a unified government. His rule was quickly undermined by Miangul Abdul Wadud, the grandson of the influential spiritual leader of Swat, Akhund Abdul Ghafur, known fondly as Saidu Baba. In 1917, Abdul Jabbar Shah was asked to step down, and Miangul Abdul Wadud became known as the first ruler, or Wali, of Swat. Beginning with his rule, Swat state developed a system of roads, public education for boys and girls, and its own judicial system, based on customary codes of conduct known as Dasturul Amal.5 “The judicial system in Swat was not Islamic as is commonly believed.”6 Decisions were heavily influenced by local politics, but cases were often decided quickly and at low cost, so justice was widely accessible. The Wali often adjudicated cases personally, particularly when they involved the wealthy landowning elite, which limited their ability to capture the political system. From 1949 until 1969, Miangul Jahanzeb, the last Wali of Swat, sought to build on his father’s achievements by providing improved access to higher education, hospital facilities, and modern roads in order to promote economic and social development. Life in Swat under the Wali’s rule may look better in hindsight than it actually was at the time, but many people do look back on that period with nostalgia. Akbar Ahmed, Ibn Khaldun Chair of Islamic Studies at American University, gives three reasons for this nostalgia. First, the structure of the state was clearly defined, with the Wali at its center. Second, the system provided “swift and correct justice”: swift in the sense that cases were heard and decisions made in short order, and correct in the sense that by and large the average person felt these decisions were fair, since they were based on customary law and local Pashtun tradition. Third, law and order were fundamental attributes of the state; if any prominent person challenged the Wali’s authority, he would be dealt with harshly. All of these dimensions—a clear authority structure, an efficient justice system, and a predictable system of rules—have been greatly degraded in the four decades since the end of the Wali’s rule. This nostalgia, according to Ahmed, emerges from its comparison with the state of affairs in Swat today.7 Informal Governance Structures From 1917 to 1949, Miangul Abdul Wadud ruled over Swat, which was both tribal and feudal in nature. The Yusufzai tribes practiced the traditional system of wesh, whereby every 10 years land was redistributed among the most powerful tribesmen. Tribes were also aligned based on two opposing della, or fighting groups, and there was mobility between the two. The Wali effectively used the della system to his advantage and would balance the power of one della against that of the other, as the need arose.8 Slowly, the Wali began to make changes to the traditional system. Between 1928 and 1932, he ended the system of wesh, began building schools, and established a network of roads and forts. In 1949, Miangul Abdul Wadud abdicated to his son, Miangul Jahanzeb, who slowly chipped away at the feudal system by elevating the smaller Khans, the landed feudal elite, under more powerful Khans. Jahanzeb sought to modernize Swat state and can be credited with improving local access to education, health facilities, and justice. While the Wali was by no means a benevolent ruler in his dealings with the Khans, he looked after the poor and 4 Historical details in this section are drawn from Sultan-i-Rome, Swat State 1915–1969: From Genesis to Merger (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008); Miangul Jahanzeb and Fredrik Barth, The Last Wali of Swat: An Autobiography (New York: Columbia University Press, 1985); and other sources as indicated. 5 Author interview with Adnan Aurangzeb, Islamabad, Pakistan, September 2010. 6 Sultan-i-Rome, Swat State 1915–1969, 319. 7 Author telephone interview with Akbar Ahmed, November 2010. See also Gustaaf Houtman, “Swat in the eye of the storm: An interview with Akbar Ahmed,” Anthropology Today 25, no. 5 (October 2009). 8 Jahanzeb and Barth, The Last Wali of Swat, 51. fleischner | the swat valley 3 provided his people with services neighboring states did not. When Swat merged with Pakistan in 1969, it was by far the most developed state in the frontier, which made the decline in governance under Pakistani administration that much more unbearable. Administration In terms of administration, the power of the Wali was absolute. According to Sultan-i-Rome, Swat state was possibly “the only governmental machine in the world which ran without a superfluity of paper.”9 During the early years, the Wali maintained a strong physical presence in the community and was easily reached by anyone who sought his attention. As he became more powerful, particularly Jahanzeb, he relied on the use of Swat’s extensive telephone lines to make calls and maintain his position at the center of local life from his home office.
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